Article Title,Year,Volume,Issue,Page Range,Author "We have the right not to be 'rescued'…": when anti-trafficking programmes undermine the health and well-being of sex workers,2012,1,,149-168,Ahmed Editorial: categorising migrants: standards complexities and politics,2018,11,,,Meyer Smuggled or trafficked? Refugee or job seeker? Deconstructing rigid classifications by rethinking women's vulnerability,2018,11,,16-35,Serughetti Refugees or victims of human trafficking? The case of migrant domestic workers in Hong Kong,2018,11,,36-51,Anderson What's in a Name? Mislabelling misidentification and the US government's failure to protect human trafficking survivors in the Central American refugee crisis,2018,11,,85-102,Soltis 'Circuit Children': the experiences and perspectives of children engaged in migrant smuggling facilitation on the US-Mexico border,2018,11,,103-119,Sanchez Migrants irregular migrants or (irregular) migrants?,2018,11,,121-124,Weatherhead The antics of semantics in international law,2018,11,,125-128,McAdam Words matter. but rights matter more,2018,11,,129-132,Oberoi Call me by my name,2018,11,,133-136,Elliott Consuming life after anti-trafficking,2018,10,,14-33,Henriksen Vulnerable here or there? Examining the vulnerability of victims of human trafficking before and after return,2018,10,,34-51,Skilbrei Dilemmas in rescue and reintegration: a critical assessment of India's policies for children trafficked for labour exploitation,2018,10,,52-69,Donger At home: family reintegration of trafficked Indonesian men,2018,10,,70-87,Surtees From passive victims to partners in their own reintegration: civil society's role in empowering returned Thai fishermen,2018,10,,88-104,Rousseau Life after trafficking in Azerbaijan: reintegration experiences of survivors,2018,10,,105-122,McCarthy Family separation reunification and intergenerational trauma in the aftermath of human trafficking in the United States,2018,10,,123-138,Juabsamai 'There are no victims here': ethnography of a reintegration shelter for survivors of trafficking in Bangladesh,2018,10,,139-154,Bose Trafficked women in Denmark--falling through the cracks,2018,10,,160-163,West Life after trafficking: a gap in the UK's modern slavery efforts,2018,10,,164-168,Roberts The Philippine Sex Workers Collective: struggling to be heard not saved,2019,12,,57-73,Parmanand Sex work migration and human trafficking in South Africa: from polarised arguments to potential partnerships,2019,12,,74-90,Yingwana Butterfly: resisting the harms of anti-trafficking policies and fostering peer-based organising in Canada,2019,12,,91-107,Lam Of raids and returns: sex work movement police oppression and the politics of the ordinary in Sonagachi India,2019,12,,127-139,Dasgupta 'Sex trafficking' as epistemic violence,2019,12,,172-187,Chapman-Schmidt Anti-trafficking efforts and colonial violence in Canada,2019,12,,201-204,Roots Editorial: knowledge is power ignorance is bliss: public perceptions and responses to human trafficking,2019,13,,1-11,Sharapov Debunking the myth of 'Super Bowl sex trafficking': media hype or evidenced-based coverage,2019,13,,13-29,Martin Public understanding of trafficking in human beings in Great Britain Hungary and Ukraine,2019,13,,30-49,Sharapov 'Killing the tree by cutting the foliage instead of uprooting it?' Rethinking awareness campaigns as a response to trafficking in South-West Nigeria,2019,13,,50-65,Olayiwola Introducing the slave next door,2019,13,,66-81,Gardner Virtual saviours: digital games and anti-trafficking awareness-raising,2019,13,,82-99,O'Brien The quest to end modern slavery: metaphors in corporate modern slavery statements,2019,13,,100-118,Ras Editorial: Between hope and hype: critical evaluations of technology's role in anti-trafficking,2020,14,,1-14,Gerasimov Freeing the modern slaves one click at a time: theorising human trafficking modern slavery and technology,2020,14,,16-32,Milivojevic There's an app for that? Ethical consumption in the fight against trafficking for labour exploitation,2020,14,,33-46,Limoncelli Addressing exploitation in supply chains: is technology a game changer for worker voice?,2020,14,,47-66,Farbenblum Witnessing in a time of homeland futurities,2020,14,,67-81,Fukushima Same same but different? Gender sex work and respectability politics in the MyRedBook and Rentboy closures,2020,14,,82-98,Majic 'I've never been so exploited': the consequences of FOSTA-SESTA in Aotearoa New Zealand,2020,14,,99-115,Tichenor Erased: the impact of FOSTA-SESTA and the removal of Backpage on sex workers,2020,14,,117-121,Blunt The use of digital evidence in human trafficking investigations,2020,14,,122-124,Chen Surveillance and entanglement: how mandatory sex offender registration impacts criminalised survivors of human trafficking,2020,14,,125-130,Goodmark Editorial: The presence of the past: lessons of history for anti-trafficking work,2017,9,,1-12,Davidson Black suffering for/from anti-trafficking advocacy,2017,9,,14-30,Beutin 'The new order of things': immobility as protection in the regime of immigration controls,2017,9,,31-47,Sharma 'Bound coolies' and other indentured workers in the Caribbean: implications for debates about human trafficking and modern slavery,2017,9,,48-63,Kempadoo Anti-white slavery legislation and its legacies in England,2017,9,,64-76,Lammasniemi Historicising 'irregular' migration from Senegal to Europe,2017,9,,77-91,Maher 'Shock and awe': a critique of the Ghana-centric child trafficking discourse,2017,9,,92-105,Okyere Editorial: The politics of evidence data and research in anti-trafficking work,2017,8,,1-13,Yea Stopping the Traffick? The problem of evidence and legislating for the 'Swedish model' in Northern Ireland,2017,8,,16-33,Huschke A formidable task: reflections on obtaining legal empirical evidence on human trafficking in canada,2017,8,,43-49,O'Doherty Intensifying insecurities: the impact of climate change on vulnerability to human trafficking in the Indian Sundarbans,2017,8,,50-59,Molinari Acting in isolation: safeguarding and anti-trafficking officers' evidence and intelligence practices at the border,2017,8,,70-79,Hadjimatheou What's wrong with the Global Slavery Index?,2017,8,,90-112,Gallagher Constraints to a robust evidence base for anti-trafficking interventions,2017,8,,113-130,Harkins Monitoring and evaluation of human trafficking partnerships in England and Wales,2017,8,,131-146,Dyke Building the infrastructure of anti-trafficking part II: why measurement matters,2017,8,,148-152,David Playing the numbers: the spurious promise of global trafficking statistics,2017,8,,153-156,Feingold Global trafficking prevalence data advances the fight against trafficking in persons,2017,8,,157-160,Robinson Global trafficking prevalence data distorts efforts to stop patterns of human trafficking,2017,8,,161-164,Dottridge Trafficking (in) representations: understanding the recurring appeal of victimhood and slavery in neoliberal times,2016,7,,1-10,Mai My experience is mine to tell: challenging the abolitionist victimhood framework,2016,7,,12-38,Cojocaru How to stage a raid: police media and the master narrative of trafficking,2016,7,,39-55,Hill Neoliberal sexual humanitarianism and story-telling: the case of Somaly Mam,2016,7,,56-78,Hoefinger Expelling slavery from the nation: representations of labour exploitation in Australia's supply chain,2016,7,,79-96,Szörényi 'It's all in their brain': constructing the figure of the trafficking victim on the US-Mexico border,2016,7,,97-114,Sanchez Looking beyond 'white slavery': trafficking the Jewish association and the dangerous politics of migration control in England 1890-1910,2016,7,,115-138,Attwood Captured 'realities' of human trafficking: analysis of photographs illustrating stories on trafficking into the sex industry in Serbian media,2016,7,,139-160,Krsmanovic Rebooting trafficking,2016,7,,161-181,Villiers The art of the possible: making films on sex work migration and human trafficking,2016,7,,182-199,Plambech Editorial: the problems and prospects of trafficking prosecutions: ending impunity and securing justice,2016,6,,1-11,Gallagher Two birds with one stone? Implications of conditional assistance in victim protection and prosecution of traffickers,2016,6,,13-30,Brunovskis Transaction costs: prosecuting child trafficking for illegal adoption in Russia,2016,6,,31-47,McCarthy The prosecution of state-level human trafficking cases in the United States,2016,6,,48-70,Fahy Trafficking of women for sexual exploitation in Europe: prosecution trials and their impact,2016,6,,71-90,Bos The prominent role of national judges in interpreting the international definition of human trafficking,2016,6,,91-105,Dettmeijer-Vermeulen Investments in human trafficking prosecutions are indispensable,2016,6,,107-110,Boutros Prioritising prosecutions is the wrong approach,2016,6,,111-113,D'Adamo The importance of strategic victim-centred human trafficking prosecutions,2016,6,,114-117,French Resisting the carceral: the need to align anti-trafficking efforts with movements for criminal justice reform,2016,6,,118-122,Mogulescu Not all prosecutions are created equal: less counting prosecutions more making prosecutions count,2016,6,,123-125,McAdam Villains and victims but no workers: why a prosecution-focussed approach to human trafficking fails trafficked persons,2016,6,,126-129,Thiemann Innocent traffickers guilty victims: the case for prosecuting so-called 'bottom girls' in the United States,2016,6,,130-133,Levy Human rights and economic opportunity will end trafficking,2016,6,,134-137,Thukral Palermo's promise: victims' rights and human trafficking,2016,6,,138-141,Vandenberg Editorial: what's in a name? Distinguishing forced labour trafficking and slavery,2015,5,,1-9,Piper Trade unions forced labour and human trafficking,2015,5,,11-29,Ford Deploying disclosure laws to eliminate forced labour: supply chain transparency efforts of brazil and the united states of america,2015,5,,30-49,Feasley Asylum immigration restrictions and exploitation: hyper-precarity as a lens for understanding and tackling forced labour,2015,5,,49-67,Waite 'Tied visas' and inadequate labour protections: a formula for abuse and exploitation of migrant domestic workers in the United Kingdom,2015,5,,69-88,Demetriou Vulnerability to forced labour and trafficking: the case of Romanian women in the agricultural sector in Sicily,2015,5,,89-108,Palumbo Policy and practice: the role of trade unions in reducing migrant workers' vulnerability to forced labour and human trafficking in the Greater Mekong Subregion,2015,5,,111-128,Olsen Policy and practice: claiming space for labour rights within the United Kingdom modern slavery crusade,2015,5,,129-143,Robinson Debate: the challenges and perils of reframing trafficking as 'modern-day slavery',2015,5,,146-149,Chuang Debate: when it comes to modern slavery do definitions matter?,2015,5,,150-152,David Debate: forced labour slavery and human trafficking: when do definitions matter?,2015,5,,153-157,Plant Debate: towards a cohesive and contextualised response: when is it necessary to distinguish between forced labour trafficking in persons and slavery?,2015,5,,158-161,Paavilainen Debate: use of the term 'bonded labour' is a must in the context of India,2015,5,,137-162,Prasad Measuring the success of counter-trafficking interventions in the criminal justice sector: who decides--and how?,2012,1,,10-30,Surtees GRETA's first years of work: review of the monitoring of implementation of the Council of Europe Convention on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings,2012,1,,31-42,Planitzer Accountable to whom? Accountable for what? Understanding anti-child trafficking discourse and policy in southern Benin,2012,1,,43-59,Howard The road to effective remedies: pragmatic reasons for treating cases of "sex trafficking" in the Australian sex industry as a form of "labour trafficking",2012,1,,60-79,David Using human rights to hold the US accountable for its anti-sex trafficking agenda: the universal periodic review and new directions for US policy,2012,1,,80-103,Wahab A lie more disastrous than the truth: asylum and the identification of trafficked women in the UK,2012,1,,104-119,Stepnitz Sex trafficking law enforcement and perpetrator accountability,2012,1,,122-133,Burkhalter Accountability and the use of raids to fight trafficking,2012,1,,134-148,Thukral "We have the right not to be 'rescued'...": when anti-trafficking programmes undermine the health and well-being of sex workers,2012,1,,149-168,Ahmed Editorial: human rights at the border,2013,2,,3-13,Molland Managing migration: is border control fundamental to anti-trafficking and anti-smuggling interventions?,2013,2,,15-32,Miller Who's who at the border? A rights-based approach to identifying human trafficking at international borders,2013,2,,33-49,McAdam In the eyes of the beholder: border enforcement suspect travellers and trafficking victims,2013,2,,51-66,Pickering Examining the body through technology: age disputes and the UK border control system,2013,2,,67-80,Smith Shaping the victim: borders security and human trafficking in Albania,2013,2,,81-96,Campbell Immigration policy reform in the United States: reframing the enforcement discourse to fight human trafficking and promote shared prosperity,2013,2,,97-118,Avendaño Health and rights at the margins: human trafficking and HIV/AIDS amongst Jingpo ethnic communities in Ruili City China,2013,2,,119-136,Shih From the Horn of Africa to the Middle East: human trafficking of Eritrean asylum seekers across borders,2013,2,,137-154,Lijnders Editorial: How is the money to combat human trafficking spent?,2014,3,,1-7,Dottridge Giving us the 'biggest bang for the buck' (or not): anti-trafficking government funding in Ukraine and the United Kingdom,2014,3,,16-40,Sharapov Anti-trafficking interventions in Nigeria and the principal-agent aid model,2014,3,,41-63,Nwogu Who Funds Re/integration? Ensuring sustainable services for trafficking victims,2014,3,,64-86,Surtees Do evidence-based approaches alienate Canadian anti-trafficking funders?,2014,3,,87-108,Ham Where is the funding for anti-trafficking work? A look at donor funds policies and practices in europe,2014,3,,109-132,Hoff OECD and modern slavery: how much aid money is spent to tackle the issue?,2014,3,,133-150,Ucnikova Debate: Lessons learnt from 10 years and USD 50 million of grant making to end human trafficking,2014,3,,152-156,Newcomb Debate: What would be the best way to use 10 million dollars in the counter-trafficking sector?,2014,3,,157-162,Friedman Debate: Strategically working in parallel to traffickers,2014,3,,163-166,Tournecuillert Debate: Prevention and victim compensation,2014,3,,167-170,Varia Debate: Money money money,2014,3,,171-175,Ellinger Editorial: Looking back looking forward: the UN Trafficking Protocol at fifteen,2015,4,,3-12,Bhabha Two cheers for the Trafficking Protocol,2015,4,,14-32,Gallagher Protocol at the crossroads: rethinking anti-trafficking law from an Indian labour law perspective,2015,4,,33-55,Kotiswaran Purity victimhood and agency: fifteen years of the UN Trafficking Protocol,2015,4,,56-79,Wijers Was trafficking in persons really criminalised?,2015,4,,80-97,Kangaspunta Re-evaluating Palermo: the case of Burmese women as Chinese brides,2015,4,,98-119,Hackney Trafficking in persons for ransom and the need to expand the interpretation of Article 3 of the UN Trafficking Protocol,2015,4,,120-141,Brhane Debate - Achievements of the Trafficking Protocol: perspectives from the former UN Special Rapporteur on Trafficking in Persons,2015,4,,144-149,Ezeilo Debate - From Palermo to the Streets of Oslo: pros and cons of the trafficking framework,2015,4,,156-160,Skilbrei Debate - trafficking as a floating signifier: the view from Brazil,2015,4,,161-166,Davida Debate - The Trafficking Protocol and the Anti-Trafficking Framework: insufficient to address exploitation,2015,4,,167-172,Baer Interview - Human trafficking in Brazil: Between crime-based and human rights-based governance,2015,4,,174-185,Castilho Editorial: from exceptional cases to everyday abuses: labour exploitation in the global economy,2020,15,,1-19,Quirk Reflections from the field: disparate responses to labour exploitation in post-Katrina Louisiana,2020,15,,21-41,McCallum Modern Heroes Modern Slaves? Listening to migrant domestic workers' everyday temporalities,2020,15,,63-81,Parry-Davies From conflict to common ground: why anti-trafficking can be compatible with challenging the systemic drivers of everyday abuses (comment),2020,15,,155-161,Cockbain Strategic redirection through litigation: forgoing the anti-trafficking framework to address labour abuses experienced by migrant sex workers,2020,15,,171-175,Clancey Domestic work and the gig economy in South Africa: old wine in new bottles?,2020,15,,102-121,Hunt The anti-trafficking cause: from exceptionalism to shared struggle (comment),2020,15,,162-166,Baskin Editorial: Trafficking in minors: confronting complex realities structural inequalities and agency,2021,16,,1-9,Gerasimov Between theory and reality: the challenge of distinguishing between trafficked children and independent child migrants,2021,16,,11-27,Dottridge Putting childhood in its place: rethinking popular discourses on the conceptualisation of child trafficking in Ghana,2021,16,,28-46,Koomson RETRACTION. 'Why was he videoing us? The ethics and politics of audio-visual propaganda in child trafficking and human trafficking campaigns,2021,16,,47-68,Okyere Child trafficking vs. child sexual exploitation: critical reflection on the UK media reports,2021,16,,69-85,Krsmanovic 'Little rascals' or not-so-ideal victims: dealing with minors trafficked for exploitation in criminal activities in the Netherlands,2021,16,,86-103,Breuil Ganged up on: how the US immigration system penalises and fails to protect Central American minors who are trafficked for criminal activity by gangs,2021,16,,104-122,Soltis Commercial gestational surrogacy: unravelling the threads between reproductive tourism and child trafficking,2021,16,,123-143,Hyder-Rahman The perfect victim: 'young girls' domestic trafficking and anti-prostitution politics in Canada,2021,16,,145-149,Meulen Online child sexual exploitation in the Philippines: moving beyond the current discourse and approach,2021,16,,150-155,Gill Editorial: Anti-trafficking education: sites of care knowledge and power,2021,17,,1-18,Suchland Social work education that addresses trafficking for sexual exploitation: an intersectional anti-oppressive practice framework,2021,17,,20-37,Nichols Human trafficking education for emergency department providers,2021,17,,38-55,Shadowen Pedagogical approaches to human trafficking through applied research laboratories,2021,17,,56-72,Dean Postcolonial frameworks with survivors' voices: teaching about contemporary and historical forms of slavery and forced labour,2021,17,,73-90,Yea Civically engaged and inclusive pedagogy: facilitating a multidisciplinary course on human trafficking,2021,17,,91-112,Alejano-Steele Truth as a victim: the challenge of anti-trafficking education in the age of Q,2021,17,,113-131,Peterka-Benton Self-education and collective learning: forming a critical 'modern slavery' study group,2021,17,,133-139,Niezna A train-the-trainer programme to deliver high quality education for healthcare providers,2021,17,,140-147,Peck Responsibly including survivors' voices in the planning and implementing of educational programmes for healthcare providers,2021,17,,148-153,Garg The next step: the California Cybersecurity Institute's anti-trafficking virtual reality immersion training,2021,17,,154-160,Borrelli The myth of the 'ideal offender': challenging persistent human trafficking stereotypes through emerging Australian cases,2022,18,,13-32,Raby What we know about human traffickers in Vietnam,2022,18,,33-48,Le Chasing geographical and social mobility: the motivations of Nigerian madams to enter indentured relationships,2022,18,,49-66,Rizzotti Oblivious 'sex traffickers': challenging stereotypes and the fairness of US trafficking laws,2022,18,,67-86,Horning Sex traffickers: friend or foe?,2022,18,,87-102,Hamid Traffickers' use of substances to recruit and control victims of domestic trafficking for sexual exploitation in the American Midwest,2022,18,,103-120,Johnson 'It's about survival': court constructions of socio-economic constraints on women offenders in Australian human trafficking for sexual exploitation cases,2022,18,,121-138,Chazal The constitutional limits of anti-trafficking norms in the commonwealth Caribbean,2022,18,,139-158,Haynes Human traffickers' fair trial rights and transnational criminal law,2022,18,,159-173,Harré Migration trafficking and the Greek economy: a comment on 'the trafficker next-door',2022,18,,175-179,Papanicolaou Questioning the notion of financial gain as the primary motivation of human traffickers,2022,18,,180-184,Clarke Trafficker profile according to US federal prosecutions,2022,18,,185-189,Wheeler Traffickers and victims: opposite sides of the same coin?,2022,18,,190-194,Leung Missing presumed trafficked: towards non-binary understandings of 'wayward' youth in jJmaica,2022,19,,9-27,Davidson Workers migrants and queers: the political economy of community among illegalised sex workers in Athens,2022,19,,28-46,Sampethai Queering sex work and mobility,2022,19,,66-86,Yingwana Why the 'ideal victim' persists: queering representations of victimhood in human trafficking discourse,2022,19,,87-102,Forringer-Beal 'Not a sufficient reason': LGBTQ asylum seekers in the Russian asylum system,2022,19,,103-117,Rosolovskaya 'They kill us trans women': migration informal labour and sex work among trans Venezuelan asylum seekers and undocumented migrants in Brazil during COVID-19,2022,19,,119-124,Su Queering protracted displacement: lessons from internally displaced persons in the Philippines,2022,19,,125-129,Quintero Queerness sex work and refugee status in Nairobi: a conversation with queer sex workers initiative for refugees,2022,19,,134-140,Wijesiriwardena Of house and home: the meanings of housing for women engaged in criminalised street-based sex work,2023,20,,54-74,Shdaimah 'No income temporary visa and too many triggers': barriers in accommodating survivors of human trafficking and slavery in Australia,2023,20,,92-110,Raby Shelter homes - safe haven or prison?,2023,20,,111-134,Hamid Editorial: Who Counts? Issues of definition in anti-trafficking and housing research and action,2023,20,,1-12,Hail-Jares Takatāpui/LGBTIQ+ people's experiences of homelessness and sex work in Aotearoa New Zealand,2023,20,,14-32,Pierse Closing the door on survivors: how anti-trafficking programmes in the US limit access to housing,2023,20,,135-143,Romero On the streets: deprivation risk and communities of care in pandemic times,2023,20,,33-53,Muriel When the home is also the workplace: women migrant domestic workers' experiences with the 'live-in' policy in Singapore and Hong Kong,2023,20,,75-91,Tan 'I'm scared to death to try it on my own': I-poems and the complexities of religious housing support for people on the US sex offender registry,2023,20,,144-160,Leon Editorial: labour migration and exploitation during COVID-19 and lessons (not) learnt,2023,21,,1-15,Lepp 'Inanimate objects': human consequences of Australia's commodified approach to migrant workers during COVID-19,2023,21,,17-35,Farbenblum 'The pandemic played a cruel joke on us': the vulnerabilities of Kyrgyz women migrant workers in Russia during COVID-19,2023,21,,36-51,Abdukadyrova No one wants to hire us: the intersectional precarity experienced by Venezuelan LGBTQ+ asylum seekers in Brazil during COVID-19,2023,21,,52-70,Su Negotiating multiple risks: health safety and well-being among internal migrant sex workers in Brazil during COVID-19,2023,21,,71-86,Jr Key stakeholder perspectives on the potential impact of COVID-19 on human trafficking for the purpose of labour exploitation,2023,21,,105-120,Murphy Providing services to women in situations of prostitution and human trafficking during the COVID-19 pandemic in Spain Italy and Portugal,2023,21,,141-144,Meneses-Falcón